κύτος

See also: κήτος and κῆτος

Ancient Greek

Etymology

According to Beekes derived from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kewH-; related to σκῦτος (skûtos, hide, leather), Latin cutis (skin), and English hide.

Pronunciation

 

Noun

κῠ́τος • (kútos) n (genitive κῠ́τους); third declension

  1. a hollow
  2. any vessel; e.g. a jar, an urn, a vase, etc.
  3. (used of any hollow container) the occiput, the chest, a plant’s root, the uterus, an ox’s abomasum, the body in general, the trunk thereof, metaphorically the polis, etc.

Declension

Derived terms

  • κοιλοσώματον κῠ́τος (koilosṓmaton kútos)
  • κῠ́τος ἀστέριον (kútos astérion, the starry vault of heaven)
  • πλεκτὸν κῠ́τος (plektòn kútos, basket)
  • κυτίον (kutíon, diminutive)

Descendants

  • Greek: κύτος (kýtos)
  • Latin: monocytus (Taxonomic Latin)

References

Greek

Etymology

From Ancient Greek κύτος (kútos).[1]

Noun

κύτος • (kýtos) n (plural κύτη)

  1. vessel (vase, jug, ewer, urn)
  2. hold (of ship or aeroplane)

Declension

References

  1. κύτος - Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], 1998, by the "Triantafyllidis" Foundation.
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